I'm glad the vote went against these law changes, for the simple reason that such blanket laws often tend to do more harm than good. Where the internet and copyright are concerned, there's no one size fits all solution, which is why more time and care needs to be given to fully investigating the potential ramifications of such new laws.
As a writer and journalist who makes my living online, producing and creating original content, I have first hand experience of the arguments both for and against such bills as these being introduced. Sadly, they usually only end up protecting the interests of those already at the top of the digital food chain.
I've suffered financial loss because of my work and creative content being stolen and published elsewhere, without even the courtesy of being cited or accredited as the original source. Usually the biggest culprits were the supposedly reputable big brand media outlets and press agencies. Yes, there are legal routes that can be taken to protect copyright content, but when you're a small fish, they take so much time, effort and cost, as to be worthless.
That said, I also ran a site that suffered because of the Spanish government introducing "link tax" legislation, which protected the interests of the big media outlets here, but took a "f*ck the rest" approach with everyone else, which led to Google News and the leading aggregation services pulling the plug on Spanish websites. As a small outlet reliant on those aggregation services to bring in visitors, within a matter of days our readership halved, our revenues nosedived and we went out of business. So much for the "idea" of protecting the content creators, eh!
There are no easy solutions, especially when politicians are involved who haven't got the first clue about what they're dealing with, in the digital age. Unfortunately, the single biggest driving force for most changes and legislature is greed. The big get bigger, while the small end up disappearing.